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Viggen related videos


RaXha

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I Though we could compile all of the Viggen (preferably AJ/AJS) related videos we stumble upon in this thread. :pilotfly:

 

A short documentary aboy the Viggen (swedish only unfortunately)

 

The only current flying AJS 37 at Airpower 2016:

 

JA 37 doing some runway cleaning.

 

Low level flying

 

Footage of a Viggen keeping eye on some german and warsaw pact ships. (Skip to 38m58s)


Edited by RaXha
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Still remember when we picked pine needles from the gap between the wing and the elevator/ailerons. Heard the stories about it before i joined the squadron but didnt believe it... Oh man was i wrong... :)

 

Impostor! :P Welcome to the forums!

 

Very nice to see somebody who has hands on experience with an aircraft in the sim, I look forward to hearing more :D

DCS modules are built up to a spec, not down to a schedule.

 

In order to utilize a system to your advantage, you must know how it works.

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Impostor! :P Welcome to the forums!

 

Very nice to see somebody who has hands on experience with an aircraft in the sim, I look forward to hearing more :D

 

Hehe, Sorry about that :)

Well, my experience is a tad old by now, but reading up on it sure takes me back. Cant wait to get my hands on it. Am actually seing an old friend this week who used to fly SH37. Anything you want me to ask him? :o

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Documentary on the development of the Viggen, in two parts (Swedish narration):

 

Part 1:

 

 

Part 2:

 

System specs:

 

Gigabyte Aorus Master, i7 9700K@std, GTX 1080TI OC, 32 GB 3000 MHz RAM, NVMe M.2 SSD, Oculus Quest VR (2x1600x1440)

Warthog HOTAS w/150mm extension, Slaw pedals, Gametrix Jetseat, TrackIR for monitor use

 

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The Viggen signature short field landing, reverse, take off:

 

System specs:

 

Gigabyte Aorus Master, i7 9700K@std, GTX 1080TI OC, 32 GB 3000 MHz RAM, NVMe M.2 SSD, Oculus Quest VR (2x1600x1440)

Warthog HOTAS w/150mm extension, Slaw pedals, Gametrix Jetseat, TrackIR for monitor use

 

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JA-37 field rearming exercise 1996:

 

 

(according to YT comment apparently a bit clumsily executed, and in about double the time possible if well executed. :) )

System specs:

 

Gigabyte Aorus Master, i7 9700K@std, GTX 1080TI OC, 32 GB 3000 MHz RAM, NVMe M.2 SSD, Oculus Quest VR (2x1600x1440)

Warthog HOTAS w/150mm extension, Slaw pedals, Gametrix Jetseat, TrackIR for monitor use

 

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JA-37 field rearming exercise

 

(according to YT comment apparently a bit clumsily executed, and in about double the time possible if well executed. :) )

The crew clearly is not fully trimmed, some of the crew even seem a bit confused abour their task... There is no way of telling the actual time this took because of the numerous cuts in the video, but a full arming and refueling would take less than about 12 minutes. We rarely did full rearming though. My crew ( my initial job was to load the cannon and later in my service, to lead the munitions crew) did quite a few turn around displys and got a lot of practise :)

A typical display rearm/refuel cycle (80% fuel, 2 rb74, 2 rb71 and 125 30mm cannon rounds) usually was about 5,5- 6 mins with a well trimmed crew. The 80% fuel limit was due to restriction issues with the following air display.

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A typical display rearm/refuel cycle (80% fuel, 2 rb74, 2 rb71 and 125 30mm cannon rounds) usually was about 5,5- 6 mins with a well trimmed crew. The 80% fuel limit was due to restriction issues with the following air display.

 

Did the ground crew have a fuel gauge near the filler cap to monitor the ammount of fuel went in the aircraft? Or did the pilot monitor it? The reason I ask is because I guess the ammount of fuel left in the aircraft would differ from plane to plane when deploying to road bases and such. So if everyone needed 80 - 90 % the refill ammount would be different for each aircraft.

Intel Core i7-8700 3,20GHz - EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti SC2 - 32Gb Ram - DCS on 500 GB SSD - Windows 10 - Thrusmaster Warthog - Thrustmaster TPR pedals - Track Ir 5 - Samsung Odyssey+

 

[sIGPIC][/sIGPIC]

 

http://www.virtualredarrows.com

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Did the ground crew have a fuel gauge near the filler cap to monitor the ammount of fuel went in the aircraft? Or did the pilot monitor it? The reason I ask is because I guess the ammount of fuel left in the aircraft would differ from plane to plane when deploying to road bases and such. So if everyone needed 80 - 90 % the refill ammount would be different for each aircraft.

 

IIRC, the gauge was by the filler nozzle, showing the actual amount left in the aircraft.

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Some Viggen videos:

 

JA37 Blue Petter

 

http://www.rbdesign.se/film/Petter_blue.mp4

 

Viggen STOL

 

http://www.rbdesign.se/film/Viggen_STOL.mp4

 

The Air Force "as high as you can get" epic old commercial featuring a little Viggen.

 

http://www.rbdesign.se/film/fv_reklam.mp4

 

 

 

 

Again JA37 but with nice footage and English narration

 

http://www.rbdesign.se/film/SAAB_37_VIGGEN.mp4


Edited by shaggy

Intel Core i7-8700 3,20GHz - EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti SC2 - 32Gb Ram - DCS on 500 GB SSD - Windows 10 - Thrusmaster Warthog - Thrustmaster TPR pedals - Track Ir 5 - Samsung Odyssey+

 

[sIGPIC][/sIGPIC]

 

http://www.virtualredarrows.com

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F6 Karlsborg using the AJ37 Viggen

 

 

 

F17 Kallinge Using the JA37. Lots of Viggen footage

 

 

 

F21 Luleå, again using the JA37 but still very nice footage both interior and exterior. Nice HUD footage.

 

 

F21 Luleå with AJSF37 and AJS37 on a road base exercise

 

 

AJS37 Short Takeoff "pity you can't see the acceleration down the runway though

 

Intel Core i7-8700 3,20GHz - EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti SC2 - 32Gb Ram - DCS on 500 GB SSD - Windows 10 - Thrusmaster Warthog - Thrustmaster TPR pedals - Track Ir 5 - Samsung Odyssey+

 

[sIGPIC][/sIGPIC]

 

http://www.virtualredarrows.com

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Very nice helmet cam from JA 37 in 1993.

 

Notice especially the rain stripes on the canopy during low level flight.

(I want that! =-) )

 

System specs:

 

Gigabyte Aorus Master, i7 9700K@std, GTX 1080TI OC, 32 GB 3000 MHz RAM, NVMe M.2 SSD, Oculus Quest VR (2x1600x1440)

Warthog HOTAS w/150mm extension, Slaw pedals, Gametrix Jetseat, TrackIR for monitor use

 

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